7.4.18

14 killed as ice hockey team bus crashes with truck in Canada

A bus carrying a junior ice hockey team collided with a truck on a
rural highway in Canada’s western Saskatchewan province, killing at
least 14 people, local media said Saturday citing police.
The Saskatoon StarPhoenix said 14 more were injured — including three
critically — in Friday’s accident involving the Humboldt Broncos team
bus.
The bus was carrying 28 people including the driver.

Police said the crash took place at around 5:00 pm about 28
kilometers (18 miles) north of the town of Tisdale, a trading center in
an overwhelmingly agricultural region.
The team was heading north for a Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League playoff game against the Nipawin Hawks.
The Saskatchewan league is a feeder system for higher levels of
hockey with many graduating to play at US and Canadian colleges and
major junior league level, while some go on to the National Hockey
League.
“It is a significant accident, we had a tractor trailer and a bus
collide,” Royal Canadian Mounted Police inspector Ted Monro told a press
conference, declining to give details about the victims.
The condition of the truck’s driver is unknown.
The Saskatchewan Health Authority said on Twitter it was dealing with
a “high volume of incoming trauma cases” at Royal University Hospital
and St Paul’s Hospital, both located in Saskatoon some 250 kilometers
(150 miles) away from the crash site.
Victims’ families were directed to Nipawin Apostolic Church for information and support.
“I cannot imagine what these parents are going through, and my heart
goes out to everyone affected by this terrible tragedy, in the Humboldt
community and beyond,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted.‘Devastated’
“Our Broncos family is in shock as we try to come to grips with our
incredible loss,” Broncos team president Kevin Garinger said in a
statement.
The team comprises 24 players, all from Canada, with the youngest aged 16 and the oldest 21.
“It’s a horrible accident, my God,” Darren Opp, president of the
Nipawin Hawks hockey team, told the Globe and Mail. “It’s very, very
bad.
“There’s uncles and moms and dads waiting to hear whether their sons and nephews are OK.”
In a statement, Hockey Canada said was “devastated” by the news.
“Our hockey community is a tight-knit family. We will come together
in support of each other in the days ahead, as we mourn those lives
lost, remember the injured and support those whose lives are forever
changed by this tragedy,” it added.
In a country where ice hockey is a national sport, news of the crash
sparked an outpouring of grief on social media, with fans and players
alike sharing messages of condolences using the hashtag
#PrayforHumboldt.
“My entire career I’ve looked forward to every bus trip”, tweeted Anaheim Ducks defenseman Steven Oleksy.
“It’s a place where players can forget what happens on the ice. 2night my heart is in Humboldt.”
An online fundraising page set up by a woman listed on social media
as a Humboldt resident raised nearly CAN$40,000 in a matter of hours.
The fatal smash brought back memories of a single vehicle bus crash
in December 1986, also in Saskatchewan, that killed four members of the
Western Hockey League Swift Current Broncos.
The Swift Current Broncos also shared their condolences.
“Humboldt Broncos weighing heavy in our hearts and minds tonight,” the team said on Twitter.